[Discuss] protecting kids online
Kent Borg
kentborg at borg.org
Wed Feb 5 16:01:32 EST 2014
On 02/05/2014 12:00 PM, Eric Chadbourne wrote:
> I have two nieces (7 & 9) with shiny new android tablets. I've looked
> at various browser plugins and apps but nothing really stood out to me
> that would effectively block adult content and was no cost. The couple
> of things I tried seem pretty easy to get around. Anybody have any
> suggestions?
Speaking as one who once was a kid (but admittedly someone who has no
kids), blocking seems the wrong approach.
There are a lot of problems and worries and risks about technology, and
we are just figuring out what they all are, all as new dangers are being
invented every day. Blocking "adult content" seems a recipe for
thinking the problem is solved, responsibility met, and moving on to
other things that are more fun and less work.
Just boring old Facebook and Twitter appear to be dangerous. There was
that girl who recently threw herself off a cement plant tower or
something in Florida. She was being bullied online, her parents had
taken her off social media sites when she was having problems and she
knew she was having problems, but she couldn't resist and she secretly
went back.
Clearly this is an extreme case, but I think it has some value anyway: I
don't think looking at a dirty picture is going to shatter a 7 year old
girl (how much interest will she have in that anyway?), I would be far
more worried by other risks, much more insidious things, like posting
stupid things that might haunt her for years to come, or corresponding
with a predator who temps her to danger. Or just spending up a storm
with in-app purchases from some addictive game. There are so many apps
I don't use, so many risks I don't know about--and no one does. This is
not a simple project.
In olden days we had fairy tales that were cautionary examples to teach
our naturally trusting children to be suspicious of some dangerous
things. (Some of these old stories were rather violent and extreme, and
in recent decades have themselves been censored by worried adults. Find
an uncensored copy Grimm's and see.)
At the moment we are in new territory, we don't know what the risks are,
no one does, we don't have a canon of standard precautions to teach
children. Which means the children need personal supervision here.
They need to be warned that there are dangers out there that are new and
changing, and to be cautious, and ask about things they are not sure
about. We need children talking with their parents about what they are
doing online even if it is not dangerous--because you don't know. We
need children to look at technology with skepticism and not think that
it is a benign force. (Sorry techies, this is dangerous stuff now.)
Children don't want to get hurt, they are capable of cooperation in this
effort to keep them safe.
But putting up content blocks seems the wrong first step, it sets her up
as an opponent, doesn't it?
I'm not saying that no technical assists are available here. For
example recent versions of Android for tablets have different accounts,
so it is possible to set up one for a kid that only has a few apps, at
first, and maybe make her techie world bigger only bit by bit, over
time, as she, and her parents, master the earlier bits.
This is an evolving problem that *none* of us understand. In my
opinion, it needs ongoing parental effort; having a techie uncle install
something to make it better not only won't do the trick, I think it goes
in the wrong direction.
-kb, the Kent who can talk big because he has no kids and this is,
admittedly, all theoretical for him.
More information about the Discuss
mailing list